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Fascinating Facts • American writer Mark Twain described the shape of the Mississippi River as “a long, pliant [easily bent] apple-paring [peeling].” • Each of the Great Lakes ranks among the fourteen largest lakes in the world. • Rain forests grow in parts of the West near the Pacific coast. LANDFORMS Genre Nonfiction Comprehension Skill Compare and Contrast Text Features • Maps • Captions AND WATERWAYS Scott Foresman Social Studies ISBN 0-328-14842-3 ì<(sk$m)=beiece< +^-Ä-U-Ä-U by Ann Rossi Many natural features contribute to the distinctive quality of the different areas of the United States. In this book you will read about some of the natural features found in the diverse areas of our country. Write to It! Think about the landforms and waterways you just read about. Make a chart to show in which regions they are located. Choose one region and write two or three paragraphs describing some of the things you could see if you visited that region. Vocabulary region desert landform mountain erosion volcano plain wetland prairie waterway glacier Write your paragraphs on a separate sheet of paper. LANDFORMS AND WATERWAYS Maps MapQuest, Inc. Photographs by Ann Rossi Every effort has been made to secure permission and provide appropriate credit for photographic material. The publisher deeply regrets any omission and pledges to correct errors called to its attention in subsequent editions. Unless otherwise acknowledged, all photographs are the property of Scott Foresman, a division of Pearson Education. ISBN: 0-328-14842-3 Photo locators denoted as follows: Top (T), Center (C), Bottom (B), Left (L), Right (R), Background (Bkgd) Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Printed in the United States of America. This publication is protected by Copyright, and permission should be obtained from the publisher prior to any prohibited reproduction, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission in any form by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or likewise. For information regarding permission(s), write to: Permissions Department, Scott Foresman, 1900 East Lake Avenue, Glenview, Illinois 60025. Opener: ©Digital Vision 2 ©David Edwards/NGS Image Collection 6 (T) ©Corbis, (CL) ©DK Images 7 ©Transparencies, Inc. Editorial Offices: Glenview, Illinois • Parsippany, New Jersey • New York, New York 9 ©Jake Rajs/Getty Images 10 ©Digital Vision Sales Offices: Needham, Massachusetts • Duluth, Georgia • Glenview, Illinois 13 ©NASA/Corbis Coppell, Texas • Sacramento, California • Mesa, Arizona 14 ©Getty Images 15 ©Iain Davidson Photographic/Alamy 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 V0G1 14 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 Regions of the United States Regions of the United States CA 100 Miles IL KS MO OK Re d R . AR TX IN Oh i 0 0 N MEXICO 200 DC VA NC P AP SC GA L AL AT TN MS OH R . WV KY LA PACIFIC OCEAN HI AN T MO PL IC C UN A I OA TA N ST A INS L CO Colo R. ra COLORADO PLATEAU do AZ NM PA IA AC NS 0 CA TAI PACIFIC OCEAN HI UT NE MA NY MI WI SD WY ME RI CT NJ DE MD AN UN Northeast Southeast Midwest Southwest West NV MN o MO ID PACIFIC OCEAN Key NH VT AL OR MT M issouri R ND . Y 400 Kilometers CK 0 WA RO 400 Miles R. D 0 0 100 Kilometers Dramatic rock formations such as this are common in many parts of the Southwest. CANADA A M ississip pi AK NA A variety of diverse areas make up the United States. Some people divide the United States into regions that include the Northeast, Southeast, Midwest, Southwest, and West. Each region has its own qualities and a unique set of characteristics. Many people often think of the Midwest as having endless miles of grasses waving in the wind. When people picture the Southwest, they might visualize a desert or perhaps a dramatic rock formation. The combination of natural features in each region contributes to the unique character of that region. FL ATLANTIC OCEAN Gulf of Mexico 400 Miles 200 400 Kilometers This map shows the five regions of the United States. Despite the distinctive quality of each region, it may also possess a type of landform that exists in other regions. For example, nearly every region has a mountain range. Each of the regions in the United States has many different kinds of landforms. Some of them will be examined in this book, as will the forces that shape the natural features of the United States. 2 3 Steep-sloped Landforms Mountains are landforms that usually have steep slopes and sharp or slightly rounded peaks. Scientists believe that Earth has an outer layer, or shell, made up of many pieces called plates. These plates float on a layer of melted rock, which is always moving and therefore pushes the plates around. Sometimes the plates bump into each other or are pushed a certain way, causing a particular kind of mountain to form. Once the mountain has formed, other natural forces such as wind, rain, and erosion begin to shape the mountain. The Rocky Mountains are the largest mountain system in North America. Made up of several smaller mountain ranges, this vast mountain system is more than 3,000 miles (4,800 kilometers) long and stretches from New Mexico in the Southwest up to Alaska in the West, passing through Canada. The highest mountain peaks in the Rocky Mountains are in Colorado, where numerous peaks are more than 14,000 feet (4,267 meters) high. Another mountain system in the West is the Pacific mountain system, which runs parallel to the Pacific coasts in California, Oregon, and Washington, for thousands of miles. The Cascade Range is one part of the Pacific mountain system. The Sierra Nevada, located in eastern California, is part of the Cascades. Most of the peaks that are part of the Cascade Range are volcanoes. Many are dormant, or have not erupted for a long time. Mount St. Helens, however, is a volcano that erupted violently in 1980 after being dormant for more than 120 years. After a period of activity, the volcano again went to sleep. Then in October 2004, Mount St. Helens erupted again. Another part of the West that has active volcanoes is Hawaii, which is made up of 132 islands, all of them formed by volcanoes. Hawaii Volcanoes National Park At Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, visitors can view Kilauea (key-law-WAY-aw), one of Earth’s most active volcanoes. Kilauea has been erupting fairly steadily since 1983. 4 5 Mount St. Helens is located in Washington. Inside a Volcano Ash cloud Lava Like the Rocky Mountains and the Pacific mountain system, the Appalachian Mountains are part of a large mountain system in North America. Unlike those mountain systems, however, the Appalachians are in the eastern part of the continent, stretching for about 1,500 miles (2,400 kilometers) from Alabama in the Southeast up through the Northeast and into Canada. Although the Rocky Mountains are the largest mountain system in North America, the Appalachians are the oldest. They, too, are made up of several mountain ranges that include the White Mountains, the Green Mountains, the Catskills in the Northeast, and the Black Mountains and the Great Smoky Mountains in the Southeast. The tallest peak of the Appalachians measures 6,684 feet high (2,037 meters). The tallest peak of the Appalachians is Mount Mitchell, located in the Black Mountains. Feeder pipe Magma chamber A volcano may erupt when magma, or melted rock, gathers underground in a magma chamber. Pressure from within Earth forces the magma upward through the feeder pipe. The volcano then erupts, spewing out lava and clouds of steam, ash, and gases. Lava is the term for magma that erupts onto Earth’s surface. 6 7 Different Kinds of Plains A plain is a large area of flat or fairly flat land. Plains have different names depending upon their location or their climate. For example, swamps are low-lying wet plains. Plains can be found in several regions of the United States. The Atlantic Coastal Plain lies along the East Coast of the United States. In segments of the Northeast, the Atlantic Coastal Plain is fairly narrow. It widens in the Southeast and covers much of North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida. The Gulf Coastal Plain curves along the Gulf of Mexico from Florida to southern Texas. Both the Gulf Coastal Plain and the Atlantic Coastal Plain have many wetlands, such as swamps and marshes. Rivers flow from inland areas through the coastal plains to the ocean, picking up soil and depositing it in the low-lying plains, making coastal soils more fertile. Barrier Islands In parts of the Southeast, barrier islands lie off the shore of the Atlantic Coastal Plain, protecting the mainland from the force of the ocean waves. In Florida alone barrier islands make up more than seven hundred miles of the coastline. These islands form over time as shifting sands build upon a sandbar. 8 The Great Plains is a dry grassland in North America that stretches from Texas and New Mexico north into Canada. Shorter grasses grow in the western parts of the Great Plains than in eastern areas. Another type of plain is the prairie, a fairly flat plain covered chiefly by tall grasses. Prairies stretch across the Midwest and south into Texas. Different grasses grow in different parts of the rich prairie soil. In the wetter eastern parts of the prairie, the grasses grow taller than they do in the drier, western part. They are about three times as tall, reaching heights of more than 6 feet (1.8 meters). 9 Water and Waterways The Mississippi River is the largest river in the United States. From its source in Minnesota, the Mississippi River snakes its way south, forming the border between several states in the Midwest and in the Southeast before reaching the Gulf of Mexico. Along the way the Missouri and Ohio Rivers feed into the Mississippi River, making it a mighty river system that is an important waterway in the United States. Although the Rio Grande’s source is in Colorado, it is an important river in the Southwest, running through New Mexico and forming the border between Texas and Mexico. Its water is used to irrigate crops in the dry Southwest. Another major river in the United States is the Colorado River. It, too, begins in Colorado. It then cuts through southern Utah and flows into Arizona, eventually forming the border between Arizona and California before flowing across the Mexican border to the Gulf of California. Like the Rio Grande, the waters of the Colorado are used to irrigate part of the dry Southwest, but the Colorado River is also a vital source of water for southern California. The Mississippi River is a busy waterway. 10 11 Rivers are one important kind of waterway, and lakes are another. The Great Lakes are a chain of five lakes in the northern United States, four of which form part of the border between the United States and Canada. Long ago, sheets of moving ice called glaciers created the Great Lakes. The lakes are part of a major waterway that connects the Midwest with other areas. Because the Great Lakes are connected, a boat could go from the St. Louis River in Minnesota, through the Great Lakes, and then continue by other waterways all the way to the Atlantic Ocean. The Finger Lakes in New York State almost look like fingers on a hand if you see them from above. The Great Lakes 250 Miles n 125 125 250 Kilometers CANADA S MN aw re nc e To Atl Rive an ti r 0 e Superior Lak ea 0 cO c ME L t. VT WI Lake Michiga n Lake Huron nt eO Lak MI NH ario NY CT Lak e Er Illi n Riv ois er pp issi iss M MO NJ OH IN N MD IL DE Key ATLANTIC OCEAN WV National border State border VA i Ri ve KY r RI ie PA IA MA River The Great Lakes, rivers, and canals combine to form a network of waterways. 12 The Finger Lakes are much smaller than the Great Lakes, and unlike the Great Lakes, the Finger Lakes are not linked. Long ago the Finger Lakes were actually rivers, but sheets of ice reshaped the earth, cutting trenches into the river valleys and thereby creating the Finger Lakes. Bottomless Lakes Although New Mexico has few natural lakes, the Bottomless Lakes are well known. The greenish-blue color of the lakes makes them appear bottomless, but that is just an illusion. The Bottomless Lakes range in depth from 17 feet to 90 feet. 13 The Mojave Desert is part of the North American Desert. Deserts and More Deserts, unlike lakes, are dry—yet the Pacific Ocean once covered the Mojave Desert (moe-HAvee). In parts of the Mojave, sandy soil—a souvenir of the sandy ocean bottom—and extinct volcanoes adorn the landscape. In the United States, deserts are located in the West and Southwest regions. The Mojave Desert in southeastern California and parts of Nevada, Arizona, and Utah is part of a larger desert area called the North American Desert. 14 Although the Mojave is extremely dry—getting only 2 to 6 inches (50 to 150 millimeters) of rain per year—it is not necessarily always hot. Frost is not uncommon in the winter. All these landforms and waterways—deserts, volcanoes, rivers, lakes, mountains, plains, islands, and wetlands—provide a sample of the extensive natural features that exist in the varied regions of the United States. From the mountain peaks, across the prairies, through the deserts, and down the rivers to the coastal plains, they are part of what makes the United States special and unique. 15 Many natural features contribute to the Glossary distinctive quality of the different areas of the United an States. this book willrain read about desert area In that gets veryyou little some of the in water the diverse erosion the natural wearingfeatures away offound rock by areas our country. andofwind glacier huge sheets of ice that cover land Vocabulary landform a natural feature of the earth’s surface region mountain a very high landform, often with desert steep sides landform plain an area of flat land that often is covered with grass or trees mountain prairie an area where grasses grow well, but erosion trees are rare volcano region an area in which places share similar plain characteristics wetland volcano a mountain with an opening through prairie which ash, gas, and lava are forced waterway waterway a system of rivers, lakes, and canals through which ships travel glacier wetland land that is covered with water at times Write to It! Think about the landforms and waterways you just read about. Make a chart to show in which regions they are located. Choose one region and write two or three paragraphs describing some of the things you could see if you visited that region. Write your paragraphs on a separate sheet of paper. Maps MapQuest, Inc. Photographs Every effort has been made to secure permission and provide appropriate credit for photographic material. The publisher deeply regrets any omission and pledges to correct errors called to its attention in subsequent editions. Unless otherwise acknowledged, all photographs are the property of Scott Foresman, a division of Pearson Education. ISBN: 0-328-14842-3 Photo locators denoted as follows: Top (T), Center (C), Bottom (B), Left (L), Right (R), Background (Bkgd) Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Printed in the United States of America. This publication is protected by Copyright, and permission should be obtained from the publisher prior to any prohibited reproduction, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission in any form by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or likewise. For information regarding permission(s), write to: Permissions Department, Scott Foresman, 1900 East Lake Avenue, Glenview, Illinois 60025. Opener: ©Digital Vision 2 ©David Edwards/NGS Image Collection 6 (T) ©Corbis, (CL) ©DK Images 7 ©Transparencies, Inc. 9 ©Jake Rajs/Getty Images 10 ©Digital Vision 13 ©NASA/Corbis 14 ©Getty Images 15 ©Iain Davidson Photographic/Alamy 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 V0G1 14 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 16